16 Quotes & Sayings By Susan Block

Susan Block is one of America's most recognized and controversial feminists. Her influential voice in the movement has been heard in the media, in schools, and in cyberspace. Today, her work can be found in over 200 alternative newspapers around the country. She is the author of the bestselling book, The Financial Diet: A Woman's Guide to Money and Power Read more

She has been a regular guest on many radio and television programs including Oprah's Lifeclass, Oprah Winfrey's show on OWN (The Oprah Winfrey Network). Susan Block is an expert on women and money, and she speaks worldwide to empower women to take control of their finances and lives.

1
Like my prehistoric hunter-gatherer ancestors, I hit the road fairly often in my footloose youth. From Yale’s Dramat to Afghanistan’s Bamiyan Buddhas, from the tantric ashrams of Kathmandu to the libertine scenes of the Côte D’Azur and deep down into the dungeons of New York’s aptly named meat-packing district, I searched and researched sex, love and the politics of pleasure (mostly among humans).. All of that searching and researching climaxed when I met my favorite research subject, who turned into my primary research partner and “prime mate, ” my charming Prince Max. Unlike so many sex researchers who fall in and out of love (with their research as well as each other), we’re still researching, still married and, almost three decades later, more in love than ever thanks to a little bit of luck and the Bonobo Way. . Susan Block
2
I loved the zebras, the cheetahs, the fruit flies, the octopi and the rest. But The Nature of Sex “climaxed” with a species I’d never heard of before, “bonobos, ” which the narrator also called by their Latin/scientific name Pan paniscus. I knew “Pan” as classical Greek mythology’s horned and horny god of the wild, so maybe I shouldn’t have been surprised. But when the bonobos started swinging onto my screen, well… what can I say? Today, I’ve got a whole book’s worth of stuff to say, but back then, I couldn’t utter a word. Imagine looking into an evolutionary funhouse mirror and seeing a side of yourself you’ve never seen before, shocking yet deeply familiar. “Who are these vibrant, joyful creatures that look so much like me, only hairier?” I wondered. “And what’s with all the sex?” They weren’t just going at it for procreation. They were engaging in sex for recreation and interpersonal communication, very much like humans, but without the pretense, hypocrisy and shame. I got very excited, but no, I still didn’t want to have sex with them. I wanted to have sex like them (at least occasionally), in that playful yet deeply meaningful way of theirs I started calling the Bonobo Way. But would it keep our sex life out of the dreaded sinkhole? Only time would tell. Susan Block
3
I squinted through the big window, a portal to another world, trying to get a better view of the primal love scene before us. All I could see was a mass of wriggling fur and finger-like toes until my eyes focused in on one male and two females kissing, ear-tonguing and giving each other enthusiastic oral sex, punctuated with occasional somersaults, smacks and nibbles on fruit and leaves. Sometimes they interacted as a threesome. Other times, two would cavort together, while the third played with herself, alternating between fingering and using a red rubber ball as a kind of sex toy, rubbing and bouncing it vigorously against her large pink vulva. . Susan Block
4
Release your Inner Bonobo Susan Block
5
The best laid plans may not get you laid the way you planned. Susan Block
6
In Bonoboville, the females gently but firmly rule the roost, keeping the males gentle and firm Susan Block
7
Though bonobos tend to be a lot hairier than us–and they don’t build houses or churches or Pentagons like we do–these primates look and act remarkably human. They often even go beyond the merely “human, ” and enter the realm of the truly “humane. Susan Block
8
Pleasure is the Root of All Good Susan Block
9
The ideal is the enemy of the real. Susan Block
10
Love the Earth You Make Love On Susan Block
11
Bonobo discipline involves being schooled in a gentler, more playful fashion. Susan Block
12
Bonobos are... ambassadors from a primordial world of peace through pleasure, inviting us in one kiss at a time. Susan Block
13
Mommy, Daddy, what are they doing?” a little girl asked, watching the bonobos play. Her forehead and palms were pressed against the glass, as if she thought she could break on through to the other side and join them if only she pushed hard enough.“ Looks like they need private time! ” her father barked back, steering the girl away from the window as her mother brightly proposed, “Let’s go see the hippos! ” Not everybody is quite ready for the Bonobo Way, and far be it from me to push it on anyone, especially some stressed-out parents at the zoo. On the other hand, maybe they’re more ready than they realize. Ready or not, its moment has come. The time is now for human beings to step up to the plate and protect our kissing cousins from extinction, as well as learn as much as we can from them about our noblest and kinkiest characteristics, our capacity for peace (even world peace) through pleasure, more satisfying relationships, better communication, hotter sex and deeper love. Susan Block
14
What might happen if we could somehow reorient ourselves toward our more loving, bonobo side rather than our inner mad chimpanzee? Susan Block
15
Deep in the heart of the hot, wet African rainforest, there lives a tribe of peacemakers who share a multiplicity of pleasures and make a very special kind of love. South of the sprawling Congo River, in the midst of war-ravaged territory, some 2, 000 miles from the arid Ethiopian desert where the oldest human fossils have been found, lies this lush and steamy jungle paradise, the only natural habitat of the bonobo. Susan Block